Cloud property trends in hot and ultra-hot giant gas planets (WASP-43b, WASP-103b, WASP-121b, HAT-P-7b, and WASP-18b)
Ch. Helling, D. Lewis, D. Samra, L. Carone, V. Graham, O. Herbort, K., L. Chubb, M. Min, R. Waters, V. Parmentier, N. Mayne

TL;DR
This study investigates cloud properties and chemical asymmetries in ultra-hot Jupiters, revealing diverse local weather patterns, the importance of cloud modeling for planet formation insights, and potential atmospheric ionospheres affecting dynamics.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of cloud trends and chemical asymmetries across five ultra-hot Jupiters, highlighting the significance of local conditions and the role of inert tracers.
Findings
Large day/night temperature differences cause chemical asymmetries.
Increased C/O ratio indicates cloud formation.
Deep ionospheres may influence atmospheric dynamics.
Abstract
Ultra-hot Jupiters are the hottest exoplanets discovered so far. Observations begin to provide insight into the composition of their extended atmospheres and their chemical day/night asymmetries. Both are strongly affected by cloud formation. We explore trends in cloud properties for a sample of five giant gas planets: WASP-43b, WASP-18b, HAT-P-7b, WASP-103b, and WASP-121b. This provides a reference frame for cloud properties for the JWST targets WASP-43b and WASP-121b. We further explore chemically inert tracers to observe geometrical asymmetries, and if the location of inner boundary of a 3D GCM matters for the clouds that form. The large day/night temperature differences of ultra-hot Jupiters cause large chemical asymmetries: cloud-free days but cloudy nights, atomic vs. molecular gases and respectively different mean molecular weights, deep thermal ionospheres vs. low-ionised…
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